image description
Barbara Malkas signs a three-year contract with the city.
image description
Malkas said she was eager to begin. She will use the summer to develop a plan for the school district.
image description
Malkas greeted each School Committee member after the vote. She is here with Mark Moulton.
image description
With Mayor and School Committee Chairman Richard Alcombright.

North Adams School Officials Ratify Contract With New Superintendent

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story

NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The city's new superintendent of schools was made official on Wednesday night with the ratification and signing of a three-year contract.

Barbara Malkas of Clarksburg is expected to begin her new duties July 1.

She is currently under contract with the Webster Public Schools, which she said is looking into hiring an interim.

Mayor Richard Alcombright, chairman of the School Committee, did not anticipate Malkas being unable to start by July 1, nearly seven weeks away.

"I have no concerns about that. We'll figure out the next step if we have to," he said.

Retired Superintendent James Montepare is currently filling in the post but said he was very happy to turn the reins over to someone like Malkas.

The School Committee met in executive session to discuss the contract and then voted unanimously to offer Malkas $135,000 in the first year of the contract, with years two and three to be negotiated later.

The contract is the same as the one Montepare has had with some minor changes. She will receive 25 days annual vacation, and can accumulate up to 35 (five less than Montepare had in his contract); 15 sick days per year, and three personal days.

Since she will not be able to reach the minimum years necessary under the annuity plan for retirement severance, the district will invest $1,500 in pre-tax dollars each year. She will also receive minimum annual reimbursement of $1,500 for intradistrict mileage.


Malkas' request to list membership of three specific professional organizations was also part of the contract, although she is not limited to those. The committee agreed to pay dues for these associations and to provide up to $4,500 a year for professional conferences for Malkas or her designated representative.

"She's lobbied a lot for education, she's kind of a player at the state level and we want to make sure that continues," said Alcombright.

Malkas has been superintendent in Webster since 2012; she had previously been an administrator in the Pittsfield Public Schools and McCann Technical School, and a science teacher at Taconic High School. She earned her doctorate in educational leadership from the Sage Colleges in Albany, N.Y.

She and her husband, John Euchler, live in Clarksburg and have two grown children. The are originally from the New York City area.

"There's a wonderful foundation here in the North Adams Public Schools," said the mayor. "Jim's going to be turning over to you something that's good and we want you to make it better."

Malkas thanked the committee for the "amazing professional opportunity" in her own back yard.

The schools and community are great, she said, but added that to halt the decline in population, "we just need to really have a focus on education as part of the economic infrastructure of the community."

"I think if we do that and work together ... we're going to see the kind of improvement we're all hoping for, to really have this vibrant, beautiful place become a center that really attracts people to want to come back or come to ... It's going to take a lot of work and I'm looking forward to that."

Then she clapped her hands: "Let's get to work."


Tags: North Adams School Committee,   superintendent,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Letter: Save Notch Forest

Letter to the Editor

To the Editor: I'm writing in regards to the Save Notch Forest signs that I have seen.

As a proud Masshole native from North Adams, that has transplanted to Southwest Vermont, I was curious as to what the signs were about.

I am grateful that I checked out the site on the sign to learn of the extensive and heinous logging plans of the Mass Audubon society near the North Adams reservoir.

As someone who travels back down to Mass sometimes daily and ventures to the reservoir 95 percent of that time for just the peace and beauty of being able to just sit there in awe.

Each time I go, I am guaranteed to see the bald eagle that perches on the pine or birch on the eastern end of the reservoir. I've had quite a few joyfully, awesome experiences with watching it. Be when it was just chilling peacefully or swooping at the geese getting them all flustered but I loved hearing it's call after the beautiful Loons floating in the reservoir.

There was this time I could hear it calling and crying, but unable to see it. I then look up to see a hawk gliding back and forth along the reservoir, doing it's best to taunt and harass the Eagle. From the direction of the cries, I figured the bald eagle's nest must be somewhere behind that tree it usually sits on on the water's edge.

I just do not understand how Mass Audubon Society can intentionally destroy the bald eagle's habitat ... let alone the loons ... let alone all of the other heinous logging aspects that come with its proposal near the North Adams water supply. Way up mountainous terrain on already strained roads that are slowly sliding off the mountainside and near public habitation.

There are a million other places on Greylock, North Adams or Massachusetts in general, what about the other side in South Williamstown/New Ashford? More space, more direct, less people, no water supply or endangered species habitat to destroy for the fun of it.

Why does it have to be Greylock and North Adams you experiment with? Why experiment at all?

I'm grateful I stumbled upon the mighty little forest army fighting for what's good and right, let alone common sense. I am also eternally grateful for the abundant awe inspiring magic of Greylock and all she bestows.

Felicia Packard
Bennington, Vt.

 

 

View Full Story

More North Adams Stories